Photographing lens assembly

ABSTRACT

A photographing lens assembly includes, in order from an object side to an image side, a first lens element, a second lens element, a third lens element, a fourth lens element, a fifth lens element and a sixth lens element. The first lens element with positive refractive power has a convex object-side surface. The second lens element, the third lens element and the fourth lens element have refractive power. The fifth lens element with negative refractive power has a convex object-side surface and a concave image-side surface, wherein the surfaces thereof are aspheric, and at least one of the surfaces thereof has at least one inflection point thereon. The sixth lens element with negative refractive power has a convex object-side surface and a concave image-side surface, wherein the surfaces thereof are aspheric, and at least one of the surfaces thereof has at least one inflection point.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present application is a continuation of the application Ser. No.14/476,731, filed on Sep. 3, 2014, which is a continuation of theapplication Ser. No. 13/849,556, filed Mar. 25, 2013, the entirecontents of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference, whichclaims priority to Taiwan Application Serial Number 102107653, filedMar. 5, 2013, which is herein incorporated by reference.

BACKGROUND

1. Technical Field

The present disclosure relates to a photographing lens assembly. Moreparticularly, the present disclosure relates to a compact photographinglens assembly applicable to electronic products thereof.

2. Description of Related Art

In recent years, with the popularity of mobile products with camerafunctionalities, the demand of miniaturized optical lens systems isincreasing. The sensor of a conventional photographing camera istypically a CCD (Charge-Coupled Device) or a CMOS (ComplementaryMetal-Oxide-Semiconductor) sensor. As the advanced semiconductormanufacturing technologies have allowed the pixel size of sensors to bereduced and compact optical lens systems have gradually evolved towardthe field of higher megapixels, there is an increasing demand forcompact optical lens systems featuring better image quality.

A conventional compact optical lens system employed in a portableelectronic product mainly adopts a structure of four-element lens systemor five-element lens system such as the ones disclosed in the U.S. Pat.No. 7,869,142 and the U.S. Pat. No. 8,000,031. Due to the popularity ofmobile products with high-end specifications, such as smart phones andPDAs (Personal Digital Assistants), the requirements for high resolutionand image quality of modem compact optical lens systems has beenincreasing significantly. However, the conventional four-element andfive-element lens structures cannot satisfy these requirements of thecompact optical lens system.

Although other conventional optical lens systems with six-element lensstructure such as the one disclosed in the U.S. Publication No.2013/0033762 A1 is not favorable for effectively reducing the back focallength of the optical lens system due to the arrangement of therefractive powers of the fifth and the sixth lens elements. Therefore,it is not favorable for achieving an even more compact size and notapplicable for the cell phones and other portable electronic products.Moreover, this optical lens system has a curved image plane resulting inmore peripheral aberrations and thereby is not favorable for improvingimage quality.

SUMMARY

According to one aspect of the present disclosure, a photographing lensassembly includes, in order from an object side to an image side, afirst lens element, a second lens element, a third lens element, afourth lens element, a fifth lens element and a sixth lens element. Thefirst lens element with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface. The second lens element has refractive power. Thethird lens element has refractive power. The fourth lens element hasrefractive power. The fifth lens element with negative refractive powerhas a convex object-side surface and a concave image-side surface,wherein the object-side surface and the image-side surface of the fifthlens element are aspheric, and the fifth lens element has at least oneinflection point on at least one of the object-side surface and theimage-side surface thereof. The sixth lens element with negativerefractive power has a convex object-side surface and a concaveimage-side surface, wherein the object-side surface and the image-sidesurface of the sixth lens element are aspheric, and the sixth lenselement has at least one inflection point on at least one of theobject-side surface and the image-side surface thereof. Thephotographing lens assembly has a total of six lens elements withrefractive power, each of the first lens element, the second lenselement, the third lens element, the fourth lens element, the fifth lenselement and the sixth lens element is single and non-cemented lenselement. When a focal length of the fifth lens element is f5, a focallength of the sixth lens element is f6, an axial distance between thesecond lens element and the third lens element is T23, and an axialdistance between the third lens element and the fourth lens element isT34, the following relationships are satisfied:

0<f6/f5<1.2; and

0.5<T34/T23<1.7.

According to another aspect of the present disclosure, a photographinglens assembly includes, in order from an object side to an image side, afirst lens element, a second lens element, a third lens element, afourth lens element, a fifth lens element and a sixth lens element. Thefirst lens element with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface. The second lens element has refractive power. Thethird lens element has refractive power. The fourth lens element hasrefractive power. The fifth lens element with negative refractive powerhas a convex object-side surface and a concave image-side surface,wherein the object-side surface and the image-side surface of the fifthlens element are aspheric, and the fifth lens element has at least oneinflection point on at least one of the object-side surface and theimage-side surface thereof. The sixth lens element with negativerefractive power has a concave image-side surface, wherein anobject-side surface and the image-side surface of the sixth lens elementare aspheric, and the sixth lens element has at least one inflectionpoint on at least one of the object-side surface and the image-sidesurface thereof. The photographing lens assembly has a total of six lenselements with refractive power, each of the first lens element, thesecond lens element, the third lens element, the fourth lens element,the fifth lens element and the sixth lens element is single andnon-cemented lens element. When a focal length of the fifth lens elementis f5, a focal length of the sixth lens element is f6, an axial distancebetween the second lens element and the third lens element is T23, anaxial distance between the third lens element and the fourth lenselement is T34, an axial distance between the object-side surface of thefirst lens element and the image-side surface of the sixth lens elementis TD, a maximum image height of the photographing lens assembly is Y,and an axial distance between the image-side surface of the sixth lenselement and an image plane is BL, the following relationships aresatisfied:

0<f6/f5<1.2;

0.5<T34/T23<1.7; and

(TD/Y)+(BL/Y)<1.65.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The disclosure can be more fully understood by reading the followingdetailed description of the embodiment, with reference made to theaccompanying drawings as follows:

FIG. 1 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly according tothe 1st embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIG. 2 shows spherical aberration curves, astigmatic field curves and adistortion curve of the photographing lens assembly according to the 1stembodiment;

FIG. 3 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly according tothe 2nd embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIG. 4 shows spherical aberration curves, astigmatic field curves and adistortion curve of the photographing lens assembly according to the 2ndembodiment;

FIG. 5 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly according tothe 3rd embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIG. 6 shows spherical aberration curves, astigmatic field curves and adistortion curve of the photographing lens assembly according to the 3rdembodiment;

FIG. 7 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly according tothe 4th embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIG. 8 shows spherical aberration curves, astigmatic field curves and adistortion curve of the photographing lens assembly according to the 4thembodiment;

FIG. 9 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly according tothe 5th embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIG. 10 shows spherical aberration curves, astigmatic field curves and adistortion curve of the photographing lens assembly according to the 5thembodiment;

FIG. 11 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly accordingto the 6th embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIG. 12 shows spherical aberration curves, astigmatic field curves and adistortion curve of the photographing lens assembly according to the 6thembodiment;

FIG. 13 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly accordingto the 7th embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIG. 14 shows spherical aberration curves, astigmatic field curves and adistortion curve of the photographing lens assembly according to the 7thembodiment;

FIG. 15 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly accordingto the 8th embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIG. 16 shows spherical aberration curves, astigmatic field curves and adistortion curve of the photographing lens assembly according to the 8thembodiment;

FIG. 17 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly accordingto the 9th embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIG. 18 shows spherical aberration curves, astigmatic field curves and adistortion curve of the photographing lens assembly according to the 9thembodiment; and

FIG. 19 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly accordingto the 10th embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIG. 20 shows spherical aberration curves, astigmatic field curves and adistortion curve of the photographing lens assembly according to the10th embodiment;

FIG. 21 shows an exemplary figure of a projection point of a maximumeffective diameter position on the image-side surface of the sixth lenselement onto an optical axis according to the photographing lensassembly of FIG. 1; and

FIG. 22 shows SAG51 of the fifth lens element according to thephotographing lens assembly of FIG. 1.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

A photographing lens assembly includes, in order from an object side toan image side, a first lens element, a second lens element, a third lenselement, a fourth lens element, a fifth lens element and a sixth lenselement. The photographing lens assembly has a total of six lenselements with refractive power. Moreover, the photographing lensassembly further includes an image sensor located on an image plane.

The first lens element with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface and can have a concave image-side surface.Therefore, the total track length of the photographing lens assembly canbe reduced by properly adjusting the positive refractive power of thefirst lens element.

The second lens element can have negative refractive power and a concaveimage-side surface, so that it is favorable for correcting theaberration generated by the first lens element.

The fourth lens element with positive refractive power can have aconcave object-side surface and a convex image-side surface. Therefore,it is favorable for balancing the arrangement of the positive refractivepower so as to avoid overloading the positive refractive power on onesingle lens element resulting in excessive spherical aberrations. It isalso favorable for correcting the astigmatism.

The fifth lens element with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface and a concave image-side surface. Therefore, thePetzval sum of the photographing lens assembly can be correctedeffectively, so that the peripheral field of view can be better focusedon the image plane in order to improve resolving power. Moreover, theobject-side surface of the fifth lens element changes from convex at aparaxial region thereof to concave at a peripheral region thereof, andthe image-side surface of the fifth lens element changes from concave ata paraxial region thereof to convex at a peripheral region thereof. Thefifth lens element has at least one inflection point on at least one ofthe object-side surface and the image-side surface. Therefore, theaberration of the off-axis can be further corrected.

The sixth lens element with negative refractive power can have a convexobject-side surface and has a concave image-side surface. Therefore,with the negative refractive power of the fifth lens element, theprincipal point of the photographing lens assembly can be positionedaway from the image plane, and the back focal length thereby can beshortened so as to reduce the total track length. Furthermore, theobject-side surface of the sixth lens element is convex at a paraxialregion thereof and comprises two inflection points between the paraxialregion thereof and a peripheral region thereof, and the sixth lenselement has at least one inflection point on at least one of theobject-side surface and the image-side surface. Therefore, the angle atwhich the incident light projects onto the image sensor from theoff-axis can be effectively reduced, and the aberration of the off-axiscan be further corrected.

A projection point of a maximum effective diameter position on theimage-side surface of the sixth lens element onto an optical axis iscloser to an imaged object than an axial vertex on the object-sidesurface of the sixth lens element. Therefore, the change of the surfaceshape of the image-side surface will be more obvious which is favorablefor effectively correcting the peripheral aberration.

When a focal length of the fifth lens element is f5, and a focal lengthof the sixth lens element is f6, the following relationship issatisfied: 0<f6/f5<1.2. Therefore, it is favorable for effectivelycorrecting the peripheral aberration of the photographing lens assemblyand not resulting in a curved image plane. Preferably, the followingrelationship is satisfied: 0.2<f6/f5<1.0.

When an axial distance between the object-side surface of the first lenselement and the image-side surface of the sixth lens element is TD, amaximum image height of the photographing lens assembly is Y, and anaxial distance between the image-side surface of the sixth lens elementand the image plane is BL, the following relationship is satisfied:(TD/Y)+(BL/Y)<1.65. Therefore, it is favorable for reducing the backfocal length of the photographing lens assembly so as to reduce thetotal track length for maintaining a compact size.

When an axial distance between the second lens element and the thirdlens element is T23, and an axial distance between the third lenselement and the fourth lens element is T34, the following relationshipis satisfied: 0.5<T34/T23<1.7. Therefore, it is favorable for assemblingthe lens elements so as to increase the manufacturing yield rate.

When a focal length of the photographing lens assembly is f, and thefocal length of the sixth lens element is f6, the following relationshipis satisfied: −1.5<f/f6<−0.64. Therefore, the principal point of thephotographing lens assembly can be positioned away from the image plane,and the back focal length together with the total track length therebycan be reduced through properly adjusting the focal length of the sixthlens element.

When an Abbe number of the second lens element is V2, an Abbe number ofthe third lens element is V3, and an Abbe number of the fifth lenselement is V5, the following relationship is satisfied:15<(V2+V3+V5)/3<40. Therefore, it is favorable for correcting thechromatic aberration. Preferably, the following relationship issatisfied: 15<(V2+V3+V5)/3<30.

When a curvature radius of the object-side surface of the fifth lenselement is R9, and a curvature radius of the image-side surface of thefifth lens element is R10, the following relationship is satisfied:0<(R9−R10)/(R9+R10)<0.4. Therefore, the astigmatism of the photographinglens assembly can be effectively corrected so as to improve theresolving power.

When a distance in parallel with the optical axis from an axial vertexon the object-side surface of the fifth lens element to the maximumeffective diameter position on the object-side surface of the fifth lenselement is SAG51, and a central thickness of the fifth lens element isCT5, the following relationship is satisfied: −3<SAG51/CT5<−0.5.Therefore, the surface shape of the lens elements will not beexcessively curved which is thereby favorable for manufacturing andassembling the lens elements so as to keep the photographing lensassembly more compact.

When an incident angle of the chief ray at the maximum image height onthe image plane is CRA, the following relationship is satisfied: 30degrees<CRA<50 degrees. Therefore, it is favorable for controlling theangle at which the incident light projects onto the image sensor so asto improve the responding rate of the image sensor for achieving betterimage quality.

When an f-number of the photographing lens assembly is Fno, thefollowing relationship is satisfied: 1.2<Fno<2.3. Therefore, it isfavorable for making the photographing lens assembly obtain largeaperture so as to take sharp images under insufficient light conditionsby fast shutter speed.

When an axial distance between the fourth lens element and the fifthlens element is T45, and an axial distance between the fifth lenselement and the sixth lens element is T56, the following relationship issatisfied: 0<T45/T56<0.27. Therefore, it is favorable for assembling thelens elements and effectively reducing the total track length of thephotographing lens assembly so as to keep a compact size.

When a focal length of the fourth lens element is f4, and the focallength of the sixth lens element is f6, the following relationship issatisfied: −3.0<f4/f6<−0.68. Therefore, it is favorable for reducing thephotosensitivity and the total track length of the photographing lensassembly.

According to the photographing lens assembly of the present disclosure,the lens elements thereof can be made of glass or plastic material. Whenthe lens elements are made of plastic material, the manufacturing costscan be effectively reduced. When the lens elements are made of glassmaterial, the distribution of the refractive power of the photographinglens assembly may be more flexible to design. Furthermore, surfaces ofeach lens element can be aspheric, so that it is easier to make thesurfaces into non-spherical shapes. As a result, more controllablevariables are obtained, and the aberration is reduced, as well as thenumber of required lens elements can be reduced while constructing thephotographing lens assembly. Therefore, the total track length of thephotographing lens assembly can also be reduced.

According to the photographing lens assembly of the present disclosure,when the lens element has a convex surface, it indicates that thesurface is convex at the paraxial region; and when the lens element hasa concave surface, it indicates that the surface is concave at theparaxial region.

According to the photographing lens assembly of the present disclosure,the photographing lens assembly can include at least one stop, such asan aperture stop, a glare stop, or a field stop, etc. Said glare stop orsaid field stop is allocated for reducing stray light while retaininghigh image quality.

Furthermore, an aperture stop can be configured as a front stop or amiddle stop. A front stop which can be disposed between an object andthe first lens element provides a longer distance from an exit pupil ofthe system to an image plane and thereby the generated telecentriceffect improves the image-sensing efficiency of the image sensor. Amiddle stop which can be disposed between the first lens element and theimage plane is favorable for enlarging the field of view of the systemand thereby provides a wider field of view for the same.

According to the photographing lens assembly of the present disclosure,the photographing lens assembly is featured with good correction abilityand high image quality, and can be applied to 3D (three-dimensional)image capturing applications, in products such as digital cameras,mobile devices and tablets.

According to the above description of the present disclosure, thefollowing 1st-10th specific embodiments are provided for furtherexplanation.

1st Embodiment

FIG. 1 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly according tothe 1st embodiment of the present disclosure. FIG. 2 shows sphericalaberration curves, astigmatic field curves and a distortion curve of thephotographing lens assembly according to the 1st embodiment. In FIG. 1,the photographing lens assembly includes, in order from an object sideto an image side, an aperture stop 100, a first lens element 110, asecond lens element 120, a third lens element 130, a fourth lens element140, a fifth lens element 150, a sixth lens element 160, an IR-cutfilter 180, an image plane 170 and an image sensor 190. Thephotographing lens assembly has a total of six lens elements withrefractive power.

The first lens element 110 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 111 and a concave image-side surface 112. The firstlens element 110 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 111 and the image-side surface 112 being aspheric.

The second lens element 120 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 121 and a concave image-side surface 122. The secondlens element 120 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 121 and the image-side surface 122 being aspheric.

The third lens element 130 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 131 and a concave image-side surface 132. The thirdlens element 130 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 131 and the image-side surface 132 being aspheric.

The fourth lens element 140 with positive refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 141 and a convex image-side surface 142. The fourthlens element 140 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 141 and the image-side surface 142 being aspheric.

The fifth lens element 150 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 151 and a concave image-side surface 152, whereinthe object-side surface 151 of the fifth lens element 150 changes fromconvex at a paraxial region thereof to concave at a peripheral regionthereof, and the image-side surface 152 of the fifth lens element 150changes from concave at a paraxial region thereof to convex at aperipheral region thereof. Furthermore, both of the object-side surface151 and the image-side surface 152 of the fifth lens element 150 have atleast one inflection point. The fifth lens element 150 is made ofplastic material and has the object-side surface 151 and the image-sidesurface 152 being aspheric.

The sixth lens element 160 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 161 and a concave image-side surface 162, whereinthe object-side surface 161 of the sixth lens element 160 is convex at aparaxial region thereof and comprises two inflection points between theparaxial region thereof and a peripheral region thereof. Furthermore,both of the object-side surface 161 and the image-side surface 162 ofthe sixth lens element 160 have at least one inflection point. The sixthlens element 160 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 161 and the image-side surface 162 being aspheric.

A projection point P1 of a maximum effective diameter position on theimage-side surface 162 of the sixth lens element 160 onto an opticalaxis is closer to an imaged object than an axial vertex P2 on theobject-side surface 161 of the sixth lens element 160 according to thephotographing lens assembly of the first embodiment as shown in FIG. 21.

The IR-cut filter 180 is made of glass, and located between the sixthlens element 160 and the image plane 170, and will not affect the focallength of the photographing lens assembly.

The equation of the aspheric surface profiles of the aforementioned lenselements of the 1st embodiment is expressed as follows:

${{X(Y)} = {{\left( {Y^{2}\text{/}R} \right)/\left( {1 + {{sqrt}\left( {1 - {\left( {1 + k} \right) \times \left( {Y\text{/}R} \right)^{2}}} \right)}} \right)} + {\sum\limits_{i}\; {({Ai}) \times \left( Y^{i} \right)}}}},$

wherein,

X is the relative distance between a point on the aspheric surfacespaced at a distance Y from the optical axis and the tangential plane atthe aspheric surface vertex on the optical axis;

Y is the distance from the point on the curve of the aspheric surface tothe optical axis;

R is the curvature radius;

k is the conic coefficient; and

Ai is the i-th aspheric coefficient.

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 1st embodiment, whena focal length of the photographing lens assembly is f, an f-number ofthe photographing lens assembly is Fno, and half of the maximal field ofview of the photographing lens assembly is HFOV, these parameters havethe following values: f=4.19 mm; Fno=2.00; and HFOV=39.1 degrees.

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 1st embodiment, whenan Abbe number of the second lens element 120 is V2, an Abbe number ofthe third lens element 130 is V3, and an Abbe number of the fifth lenselement 150 is V5, the following relationship is satisfied:(V2+V3+V5)/3=21.4.

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 1st embodiment, whenan axial distance between the second lens element 120 and the third lenselement 130 is T23, an axial distance between the third lens element 130and the fourth lens element 140 is T34, an axial distance between thefourth lens element 140 and the fifth lens element 150 is T45, and anaxial distance between the fifth lens element 150 and the sixth lenselement 160 is T56, the following relationships are satisfied:T34/T23=0.55; and T45/T56=0.07.

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 1st embodiment, whena curvature radius of the object-side surface 151 of the fifth lenselement 150 is R9, and a curvature radius of the image-side surface 152of the fifth lens element 150 is R10, the following relationship issatisfied: (R9−R10)/(R9+R10)=0.19.

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 1st embodiment, whena focal length of the fourth lens element 140 is f4, a focal length ofthe fifth lens element 150 is f5, a focal length of the sixth lenselement 160 is f6 and the focal length of the photographing lensassembly is f, the following relationships are satisfied: f4/f6=−0.80;f6/f5=0.56; and f/f6=−0.71.

FIG. 22 shows SAG51 of the fifth lens element 150 of the photographinglens assembly according to FIG. 1. In FIG. 22, when a distance inparallel with an optical axis from an axial vertex on the object-sidesurface 151 of the fifth lens element 150 to a maximum effectivediameter position on the object-side surface 151 of the fifth lenselement 150 is SAG51 (When the distance towards the object side of thephotographing lens assembly is negative, and when the distance towardsthe image side of the photographing lens assembly is positive.), and acentral thickness of the fifth lens element 150 is CT5, the followingrelationship is satisfied: SAG51/CT5=−1.18.

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 1st embodiment, whenan incident angle of the chief ray at the maximum image height on theimage plane 170 is CRA, the following relationship is satisfied:CRA=32.85 degrees.

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 1st embodiment, whenan axial distance between the object-side surface 111 of the first lenselement 110 and the image-side surface 162 of the sixth lens element 160is TD, a maximum image height of the photographing lens assembly (halfof a diagonal length of an effective photosensitive area of the imagesensor 190) is Y, and an axial distance between the image-side surface162 of the sixth lens element 160 and an image plane 170 is BL, thefollowing relationship is satisfied: (TD/Y)+(BL/Y)=1.49.

The detailed optical data of the 1st embodiment are shown in Table 1 andthe aspheric surface data are shown in Table 2 below.

TABLE 1 1st Embodiment f = 4.19 mm, Fno = 2.00, HFOV = 39.1 deg. SurfaceCurvature Focal # Radius Thickness Material Index Abbe # Length 0 ObjectPlano Infinity 1 Ape. Stop Plano −0.350 2 Lens 1 1.676 ASP 0.604 Plastic1.565 54.5 3.72 3 7.221 ASP 0.060 4 Lens 2 56.882 ASP 0.230 Plastic1.650 21.4 −12.01 5 6.852 ASP 0.454 6 Lens 3 13.806 ASP 0.351 Plastic1.650 21.4 −213.42 7 12.430 ASP 0.250 8 Lens 4 −3.703 ASP 0.852 Plastic1.565 54.5 4.69 9 −1.673 ASP 0.050 10 Lens 5 2.823 ASP 0.320 Plastic1.650 21.4 −10.50 11 1.907 ASP 0.671 12 Lens 6 3.398 ASP 0.424 Plastic1.535 55.7 −5.87 13 1.561 ASP 0.300 14 IR-cut filter Plano 0.200 Glass1.517 64.2 — 15 Plano 0.454 16 Image Plano — Note: Reference wavelength(d-line) is 587.6 nm.

TABLE 2 Aspheric Coefficients Surface # 2 3 4 5 6 7 k = 1.8236E−013.0000E+00 3.0000E+00 −7.9614E+00 −2.0000E+01 −2.0000E+01 A4 =−7.3168E−03 −4.7080E−02 −4.5682E−02 1.4728E−03 −1.6934E−01 −1.2375E−01A6 = 3.4749E−02 −6.5871E−02 −2.3608E−03 4.1007E−02 2.4013E−01 1.3285E−01A8 = −9.0661E−02 2.7827E−01 3.0479E−01 9.1522E−02 −1.0396E+00−3.7280E−01 A10 = 1.0269E−01 −3.5974E−01 −4.8440E−01 −1.5332E−012.1704E+00 5.3947E−01 A12 = −5.1432E−02 1.9713E−01 3.2670E−01 7.1663E−02−2.6066E+00 −4.5269E−01 A14 = 1.5926E−03 −4.2918E−02 −7.5873E−021.9541E−02 1.6238E+00 2.0672E−01 A16 = −3.9106E−01 −3.6434E−02 Surface #8 9 10 11 12 13 k = −1.6564E+01 −1.7368E+00 −1.7312E+00 −7.7362E+00−6.2967E+00 −6.1093E+00 A4 = −3.0502E−02 1.2510E−02 −1.0421E−01−5.1493E−02 −2.2509E−01 −1.1460E−01 A6 = 5.2468E−02 −1.0970E−022.5362E−02 2.3601E−03 9.0299E−02 4.6501E−02 A8 = −3.7130E−02 2.0197E−03−8.9906E−03 3.8807E−03 −2.3754E−02 −1.6185E−02 A10 = 1.6045E−021.8476E−02 1.1884E−03 −3.3247E−03 4.8664E−03 4.0635E−03 A12 =−2.7334E−03 −1.3541E−02 −4.7946E−05 1.1219E−03 −6.9413E−04 −6.2355E−04A14 = 3.6612E−03 −1.6849E−04 5.7630E−05 5.0934E−05 A16 = −3.6262E−049.5275E−06 −2.0662E−06 −1.6907E−06

In Table 1, the curvature radius, the thickness and the focal length areshown in millimeters (mm). Surface numbers 0-16 represent the surfacessequentially arranged from the object-side to the image-side along theoptical axis. In Table 2, k represents the conic coefficient of theequation of the aspheric surface profiles. A1-A16 represent the asphericcoefficients ranging from the 1st order to the 16th order. Thisinformation related to Table 1 and Table 2 applies also to the Tablesfor the remaining embodiments, and so an explanation in this regard willnot be provided again.

2nd Embodiment

FIG. 3 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly according tothe 2nd embodiment of the present disclosure. FIG. 4 shows sphericalaberration curves, astigmatic field curves and a distortion curve of thephotographing lens assembly according to the 2nd embodiment. In FIG. 3,the photographing lens assembly includes, in order from an object sideto an image side, an aperture stop 200, a first lens element 210, asecond lens element 220, a third lens element 230, a fourth lens element240, a fifth lens element 250, a sixth lens element 260, an IR-cutfilter 280, an image plane 270 and an image sensor 290. Thephotographing lens assembly has a total of six lens elements withrefractive power.

The first lens element 210 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 211 and a concave image-side surface 212. The firstlens element 210 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 211 and the image-side surface 212 being aspheric.

The second lens element 220 with negative refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 221 and a concave image-side surface 222. The secondlens element 220 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 221 and the image-side surface 222 being aspheric.

The third lens element 230 with positive refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 231 and a convex image-side surface 232. The thirdlens element 230 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 231 and the image-side surface 232 being aspheric.

The fourth lens element 240 with positive refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 241 and a convex image-side surface 242. The fourthlens element 240 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 241 and the image-side surface 242 being aspheric.

The fifth lens element 250 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 251 and a concave image-side surface 252, whereinthe object-side surface 251 of the fifth lens element 250 changes fromconvex at a paraxial region thereof to concave at a peripheral regionthereof, and the image-side surface 252 of the fifth lens element 250changes from concave at a paraxial region thereof to convex at aperipheral region thereof. Furthermore, both of the object-side surface251 and the image-side surface 252 of the fifth lens element 250 have atleast one inflection point. The fifth lens element 250 is made ofplastic material and has the object-side surface 251 and the image-sidesurface 252 being aspheric.

The sixth lens element 260 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 261 and a concave image-side surface 262, whereinthe object-side surface 261 of the sixth lens element 260 is convex at aparaxial region thereof and comprises two inflection points between theparaxial region thereof and a peripheral region thereof. Furthermore,both of the object-side surface 261 and the image-side surface 262 ofthe sixth lens element 260 have at least one inflection point. The sixthlens element 260 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 261 and the image-side surface 262 being aspheric.

A projection point P1 of a maximum effective diameter position on theimage-side surface 262 of the sixth lens element 260 onto an opticalaxis is closer to an imaged object than an axial vertex P2 on theobject-side surface 261 of the sixth lens element 260. Please refer toFIG. 21 (exemplary figure), the exemplary figure for the secondembodiment will not otherwise be provided herein.

The IR-cut filter 280 is made of glass, and located between the sixthlens element 260 and the image plane 270, and will not affect the focallength of the photographing lens assembly.

The detailed optical data of the 2nd embodiment are shown in Table 3 andthe aspheric surface data are shown in Table 4 below.

TABLE 3 2nd Embodiment f = 4.27 mm, Fno = 2.00, HFOV = 38.6 deg. SurfaceCurvature Focal # Radius Thickness Material Index Abbe # Length 0 ObjectPlano Infinity 1 Ape. Stop Plano −0.354 2 Lens 1 1.700 ASP 0.697 Plastic1.544 55.9 3.45 3 15.354 ASP 0.052 4 Lens 2 −14.912 ASP 0.227 Plastic1.639 23.5 −9.57 5 10.420 ASP 0.450 6 Lens 3 −166.234 ASP 0.397 Plastic1.639 23.5 350.08 7 −95.455 ASP 0.314 8 Lens 4 −2.728 ASP 0.703 Plastic1.544 55.9 4.53 9 −1.413 ASP 0.050 10 Lens 5 3.066 ASP 0.387 Plastic1.607 26.6 −10.43 11 1.967 ASP 0.636 12 Lens 6 10.094 ASP 0.384 Plastic1.535 55.7 −4.88 13 2.047 ASP 0.450 14 IR-cut filter Plano 0.200 Glass1.517 64.2 — 15 Plano 0.293 16 Image Plano — Note: Reference wavelength(d-line) is 587.6 nm.

TABLE 4 Aspheric Coefficients Surface # 2 3 4 5 6 7 k = 1.8993E−01−1.3911E+01 −1.9653E+01 −1.2610E+01 −1.0000E+00 −1.0000E+00 A4 =−1.0782E−02 −5.9204E−02 −5.2722E−02 −3.2798E−03 −1.6197E−01 −9.5365E−02A6 = 4.1184E−02 −6.7595E−02 −1.1357E−02 3.7169E−02 2.3740E−01 1.2256E−01A8 = −9.9585E−02 2.7703E−01 3.0899E−01 7.8267E−02 −1.0502E+00−3.6621E−01 A10 = 1.0604E−01 −3.5821E−01 −4.8586E−01 −1.4778E−012.1842E+00 5.3969E−01 A12 = −5.0413E−02 2.0114E−01 3.2543E−01 8.0110E−02−2.5973E+00 −4.5467E−01 A14 = 1.8530E−03 −4.3769E−02 −7.4980E−027.4950E−03 1.6141E+00 2.0586E−01 A16 = −3.9104E−01 −3.6203E−02 Surface #8 9 10 11 12 13 k = −7.2267E+00 −2.0861E+00 −3.6875E+00 −9.4455E+00−5.9716E+00 −9.2520E+00 A4 = 3.3756E−03 1.7205E−02 −8.4845E−02−4.3336E−02 −2.0585E−01 −1.1763E−01 A6 = 4.9267E−02 −1.1024E−022.0679E−02 −5.0806E−04 8.8619E−02 5.0509E−02 A8 = −4.2879E−02 1.0261E−03−1.1316E−02 3.8012E−03 −2.3810E−02 −1.6696E−02 A10 = 1.4871E−021.8078E−02 1.9349E−03 −3.2342E−03 4.8739E−03 4.0300E−03 A12 =−1.8524E−03 −1.3555E−02 −8.7193E−05 1.1377E−03 −6.9338E−04 −6.1771E−04A14 = 3.6847E−03 −1.6835E−04 5.7589E−05 5.1441E−05 A16 = −3.6151E−048.9079E−06 −2.0776E−06 −1.7531E−06

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 2nd embodiment, thedefinitions of these parameters shown in the following table are thesame as those stated in the 1st embodiment with corresponding values forthe 2nd embodiment. Moreover, these parameters can be calculated fromTable 3 and Table 4 as the following values and satisfy the followingrelationships:

f [mm] 4.27 f4/f6 −0.93 Fno 2.00 f6/f5 0.47 HFOV [deg.] 38.6 f/f6 −0.87(V2 + V3 + V5)/3 24.5 SAG51/CT5 −1.12 T34/T23 0.7 CRA [deg.] 33.23T45/T56 0.08 (TD/Y) + (BL/Y) 1.50 (R9 − R10)/(R9 + R10) 0.22

3rd Embodiment

FIG. 5 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly according tothe 3rd embodiment of the present disclosure. FIG. 6 shows sphericalaberration curves, astigmatic field curves and a distortion curve of thephotographing lens assembly according to the 3rd embodiment. In FIG. 5,the photographing lens assembly includes, in order from an object sideto an image side, an aperture stop 300, a first lens element 310, asecond lens element 320, a third lens element 330, a fourth lens element340, a fifth lens element 350, a sixth lens element 360, an IR-cutfilter 380, an image plane 370 and an image sensor 390. Thephotographing lens assembly has a total of six lens elements withrefractive power.

The first lens element 310 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 311 and a convex image-side surface 312. The firstlens element 310 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 311 and the image-side surface 312 being aspheric.

The second lens element 320 with negative refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 321 and a concave image-side surface 322. The secondlens element 320 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 321 and the image-side surface 322 being aspheric.

The third lens element 330 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 331 and a concave image-side surface 332. The thirdlens element 330 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 331 and the image-side surface 332 being aspheric.

The fourth lens element 340 with positive refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 341 and a convex image-side surface 342. The fourthlens element 340 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 341 and the image-side surface 342 being aspheric.

The fifth lens element 350 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 351 and a concave image-side surface 352, whereinthe object-side surface 351 of the fifth lens element 350 changes fromconvex at a paraxial region thereof to concave at a peripheral regionthereof, and the image-side surface 352 of the fifth lens element 350changes from concave at a paraxial region thereof to convex at aperipheral region thereof. Furthermore, both of the object-side surface351 and the image-side surface 352 of the fifth lens element 350 have atleast one inflection point. The fifth lens element 350 is made ofplastic material and has the object-side surface 351 and the image-sidesurface 352 being aspheric.

The sixth lens element 360 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 361 and a concave image-side surface 362, whereinthe object-side surface 361 of the sixth lens element 360 is convex at aparaxial region thereof and comprises two inflection points between theparaxial region thereof and a peripheral region thereof. Furthermore,both of the object-side surface 361 and the image-side surface 362 ofthe sixth lens element 360 have at least one inflection point. The sixthlens element 360 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 361 and the image-side surface 362 being aspheric.

A projection point P1 of a maximum effective diameter position on theimage-side surface 362 of the sixth lens element 360 onto an opticalaxis is closer to an imaged object than an axial vertex P2 on theobject-side surface 361 of the sixth lens element 360. Please refer toFIG. 21 (exemplary figure), the exemplary figure for the thirdembodiment will not otherwise be provided herein.

The IR-cut filter 380 is made of glass, and located between the sixthlens element 360 and the image plane 370, and will not affect the focallength of the photographing lens assembly.

The detailed optical data of the 3rd embodiment are shown in Table 5 andthe aspheric surface data are shown in Table 6 below.

TABLE 5 3rd Embodiment f = 4.20 mm, Fno = 1.95, HFOV = 39.0 deg. SurfaceCurvature Focal # Radius Thickness Material Index Abbe # Length 0 ObjectPlano Infinity 1 Ape. Stop Plano −0.347 2 Lens 1 1.785 ASP 0.674 Plastic1.555 55.0 3.10 3 −39.418 ASP 0.050 4 Lens 2 −30.637 ASP 0.220 Plastic1.640 23.3 −5.61 5 4.076 ASP 0.435 6 Lens 3 8.687 ASP 0.452 Plastic1.544 55.9 24.96 7 23.668 ASP 0.266 8 Lens 4 −3.318 ASP 0.818 Plastic1.535 55.7 4.28 9 −1.472 ASP 0.084 10 Lens 5 4.398 ASP 0.491 Plastic1.583 30.2 −6.70 11 1.984 ASP 0.533 12 Lens 6 3.781 ASP 0.380 Plastic1.544 55.9 −6.18 13 1.717 ASP 0.450 14 IR-cut filter Plano 0.200 Glass1.517 64.2 — 15 Plano 0.252 16 Image Plano — Note: Reference wavelength(d-line) is 587.6 nm.

TABLE 6 Aspheric Coefficients Surface # 2 3 4 5 6 7 k=   2.3844E−01−2.0000E+01 −2.0000E+01 −1.6868E+01 −1.0000E+00 −1.0000E+00  A4=−9.1252E−03 −2.8357E−03 −2.7797E−02 −2.6838E−03 −1.4969E−01 −8.6535E−02 A6=   3.7848E−02 −6.2486E−02 −1.2425E−02   3.8604E−02   2.3493E−01  1.2426E−01  A8= −9.3962E−02   2.5994E−01   2.9849E−01   5.9545E−02−1.0350E+00 −3.6649E−01 A10=   1.0478E−01 −3.6212E−01 −4.9024E−01−1.4047E−01   2.1863E+00   5.3949E−01 A12= −5.4324E−02   2.0131E−01  3.1762E−01   1.0635E−01 −2.6065E+00 −4.5498E−01 A14=   6.5871E−03−3.9631E−02 −6.9039E−02 −1.5642E−02   1.6127E+00   2.0548E−01 A16=−3.9106E−01 −3.6662E−02 Surface # 8 9 10 11 12 13 k= −4.8377E+00−2.5558E+00   4.3237E−01 −1.0921E+01 −1.9880E+01 −7.1108E+00  A4=  1.1427E−02   1.1754E−02 −7.8643E−02 −3.9241E−02 −2.0851E−01−1.2166E−01  A6=   5.3795E−02 −9.0493E−03   1.8682E−02   7.1215E−04  8.8610E−02   5.0973E−02  A8= −4.2022E−02   1.8853E−03 −1.0607E−02  3.6829E−03 −2.3733E−02 −1.6587E−02 A10=   1.4889E−02   1.8151E−02  2.0294E−03 −3.2805E−03   4.8646E−03   4.0264E−03 A12= −2.0174E−03−1.3571E−02 −1.3497E−04   1.1341E−03 −6.9432E−04 −6.2006E−04 A14=  3.6826E−03 −1.6797E−04   5.7587E−05   5.1314E−05 A16= −3.5814E−04  9.0546E−06 −2.0537E−06 −1.7201E−06

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 3rd embodiment, thedefinitions of these parameters shown in the following table are thesame as those stated in the 1st embodiment with corresponding values forthe 3rd embodiment. Moreover, these parameters can be calculated fromTable 5 and Table 6 as the following values and satisfy the followingrelationships:

f [mm] 4.20 f4/f6 −0.69 Fno 1.95 f6/f5 0.92 HFOV [deg.] 39.0 f/16 −0.68(V2 + V3 + V5)/3 36.5 SAG51/CT5 −1.01 T34/T23 0.61 CRA [deg.] 32.26T45/T56 0.16 (TD/Y) + (BL/Y) 1.52 (R9 − R10)/(R9 + R10) 0.38

4th Embodiment

FIG. 7 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly according tothe 4th embodiment of the present disclosure. FIG. 8 shows sphericalaberration curves, astigmatic field curves and a distortion curve of thephotographing lens assembly according to the 4th embodiment. In FIG. 7,the photographing lens assembly includes, in order from an object sideto an image side, an aperture stop 400, a first lens element 410, asecond lens element 420, a third lens element 430, a fourth lens element440, a fifth lens element 450, a sixth lens element 460, an IR-cutfilter 480, an image plane 470 and an image sensor 490. Thephotographing lens assembly has a total of six lens elements withrefractive power.

The first lens element 410 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 411 and a convex image-side surface 412. The firstlens element 410 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 411 and the image-side surface 412 being aspheric.

The second lens element 420 with negative refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 421 and a concave image-side surface 422. The secondlens element 420 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 421 and the image-side surface 422 being aspheric.

The third lens element 430 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 431 and a convex image-side surface 432. The thirdlens element 430 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 431 and the image-side surface 432 being aspheric.

The fourth lens element 440 with positive refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 441 and a convex image-side surface 442. The fourthlens element 440 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 441 and the image-side surface 442 being aspheric.

The fifth lens element 450 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 451 and a concave image-side surface 452, whereinthe object-side surface 451 of the fifth lens element 450 changes fromconvex at a paraxial region thereof to concave at a peripheral regionthereof, and the image-side surface 452 of the fifth lens element 450changes from concave at a paraxial region thereof to convex at aperipheral region thereof. Furthermore, both of the object-side surface451 and the image-side surface 452 of the fifth lens element 450 have atleast one inflection point. The fifth lens element 450 is made ofplastic material and has the object-side surface 451 and the image-sidesurface 452 being aspheric.

The sixth lens element 460 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 461 and a concave image-side surface 462, whereinthe object-side surface 461 of the sixth lens element 460 is convex at aparaxial region thereof and comprises two inflection points between theparaxial region thereof and a peripheral region thereof. Furthermore,both of the object-side surface 461 and the image-side surface 462 ofthe sixth lens element 460 have at least one inflection point. The sixthlens element 460 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 461 and the image-side surface 462 being aspheric.

The IR-cut filter 480 is made of glass, and located between the sixthlens element 460 and the image plane 470, and will not affect the focallength of the photographing lens assembly.

The detailed optical data of the 4th embodiment are shown in Table 7 andthe aspheric surface data are shown in Table 8 below.

TABLE 7 4th Embodiment f = 4.20 mm, Fno = 2.02, HFOV = 37.5 deg. SurfaceFocal # Curvature Radius Thickness Material Index Abbe # Length 0 ObjectPlano Infinity 1 Ape. Stop Plano −0.320 2 Lens 1 1.764 ASP 0.652 Plastic1.572 54.5 3.06 3 −217.526 ASP 0.069 4 Lens 2 −15.967 ASP 0.240 Plastic1.633 23.4 −5.54 5 4.515 ASP 0.405 6 Lens 3 12.096 ASP 0.444 Plastic1.607 26.6 13.24 7 −23.625 ASP 0.275 8 Lens 4 −2.947 ASP 0.818 Plastic1.555 55.0 4.95 9 −1.562 ASP 0.050 10 Lens 5 3.292 ASP 0.349 Plastic1.607 26.6 −6.47 11 1.719 ASP 0.401 12 Lens 6 3.330 ASP 0.548 Plastic1.555 55.0 −7.09 13 1.698 ASP 0.400 14 IR-cut filter Plano 0.300 Glass1.517 64.2 — 15 Plano 0.351 16 Image Plano — Note: Reference wavelength(d-line) is 587.6 nm.

TABLE 8 Aspheric Coefficients Surface # 2 3 4 5 6 7 k=   2.2999E−01−1.0000E+01   3.0000E+00 −7.1362E+00 −1.0000E+00 −1.0000E+00  A4=−9.0977E−03 −1.1197E−02 −1.8560E−02 −7.9207E−04 −1.3379E−01 −8.0079E−02 A6=   3.2463E−02 −6.4799E−02 −1.7301E−02   1.8083E−02   2.3793E−01  1.2832E−01  A8= −8.9680E−02   2.5323E−01   2.7812E−01   8.4950E−02−1.0427E+00 −3.7413E−01 A10=   1.0722E−01 −3.6225E−01 −4.8153E−01−1.4699E−01   2.1699E+00   5.3850E−01 A12= −5.9668E−02   2.0672E−01  3.3326E−01   7.3024E−02 −2.6051E+00 −4.5273E−01 A14=   6.6019E−03−4.2545E−02 −7.7692E−02   1.6523E−02   1.6304E+00   2.0713E−01 A16=−3.9106E−01 −3.6385E−02 Surface # 8 9 10 11 12 13 k= −3.1591E+00−1.9709E+00 −3.8639E+00 −7.3870E+00 −1.2293E+00 −6.0952E+00  A4=  3.9653E−03   1.7080E−02 −1.0241E−01 −5.1948E−02 −2.0811E−01−1.0630E−01  A6=   5.3956E−02 −9.3904E−03   2.4761E−02   3.6583E−03  8.7805E−02   4.6673E−02  A8= −4.0851E−02   1.3557E−03 −1.0087E−02  4.0538E−03 −2.3752E−02 −1.6421E−02 A10=   1.5224E−02   1.8178E−02  1.4849E−03 −3.3445E−03   4.8686E−03   4.0564E−03 A12= −1.9755E−03−1.3520E−02 −1.1813E−04   1.1221E−03 −6.9359E−04 −6.1875E−04 A14=−8.1107E−05   3.6934E−03   3.4229E−05 −1.6824E−04   5.7699E−05  5.1247E−05 A16= −3.6323E−04   9.3141E−06 −2.0571E−06 −1.7407E−06

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 4th embodiment, thedefinitions of these parameters shown in the following table are thesame as those stated in the 1st embodiment with corresponding values forthe 4th embodiment. Moreover, these parameters can be calculated fromTable 7 and Table 8 as the following values and satisfy the followingrelationships:

f [mm] 4.20 f4/f6 −0.70 Fno 2.02 f6/f5 1.10 HFOV [deg.] 37.5 f/f6 −0.59(V2 + V3 + V5)/3 25.5 SAG51/CT5 −1.05 T34/T23 0.68 CRA [deg.] 34.95T45/T56 0.12 (TD/Y) + (BL/Y) 1.61 (R9 − R10)/(R9 + R10) 0.31

5th Embodiment

FIG. 9 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly according tothe 5th embodiment of the present disclosure. FIG. 10 shows sphericalaberration curves, astigmatic field curves and a distortion curve of thephotographing lens assembly according to the 5th embodiment. In FIG. 9,the photographing lens assembly includes, in order from an object sideto an image side, an aperture stop 500, a first lens element 510, a stop501, a second lens element 520, a third lens element 530, a fourth lenselement 540, a fifth lens element 550, a sixth lens element 560, anIR-cut filter 580, an image plane 570 and an image sensor 590. Thephotographing lens assembly has a total of six lens elements withrefractive power.

The first lens element 510 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 511 and a concave image-side surface 512. The firstlens element 510 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 511 and the image-side surface 512 being aspheric.

The second lens element 520 with negative refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 521 and a concave image-side surface 522. The secondlens element 520 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 521 and the image-side surface 522 being aspheric.

The third lens element 530 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 531 and a concave image-side surface 532. The thirdlens element 530 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 531 and the image-side surface 532 being aspheric.

The fourth lens element 540 with positive refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 541 and a convex image-side surface 542. The fourthlens element 540 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 541 and the image-side surface 542 being aspheric.

The fifth lens element 550 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 551 and a concave image-side surface 552, whereinthe object-side surface 551 of the fifth lens element 550 changes fromconvex at a paraxial region thereof to concave at a peripheral regionthereof, and the image-side surface 552 of the fifth lens element 550changes from concave at a paraxial region thereof to convex at aperipheral region thereof. Furthermore, both of the object-side surface551 and the image-side surface 552 of the fifth lens element 550 have atleast one inflection point. The fifth lens element 550 is made ofplastic material and has the object-side surface 551 and the image-sidesurface 552 being aspheric.

The sixth lens element 560 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 561 and a concave image-side surface 562, whereinthe object-side surface 561 of the sixth lens element 560 is convex at aparaxial region thereof and comprises two inflection points between theparaxial region thereof and a peripheral region thereof. Furthermore,both of the object-side surface 561 and the image-side surface 562 ofthe sixth lens element 560 have at least one inflection point. The sixthlens element 560 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 561 and the image-side surface 562 being aspheric.

A projection point P1 of a maximum effective diameter position on theimage-side surface 562 of the sixth lens element 560 onto an opticalaxis is closer to an imaged object than an axial vertex P2 on theobject-side surface 561 of the sixth lens element 560. Please refer toFIG. 21 (exemplary figure), the exemplary figure for the fifthembodiment will not otherwise be provided herein.

The IR-cut filter 580 is made of glass, and located between the sixthlens element 560 and the image plane 570, and will not affect the focallength of the photographing lens assembly.

The detailed optical data of the 5th embodiment are shown in Table 9 andthe aspheric surface data are shown in Table 10 below.

TABLE 9 5th Embodiment f = 4.11 mm, Fno = 2.05, HFOV = 38.0 deg. SurfaceFocal # Curvature Radius Thickness Material Index Abbe # Length 0 ObjectPlano Infinity 1 Ape. Stop Plano −0.349 2 Lens 1 1.469 ASP 0.577 Plastic1.544 55.9 3.13 3 9.252 ASP 0.028 4 Stop Plano 0.030 5 Lens 2 −14.129ASP 0.240 Plastic 1.640 23.3 −7.13 6 6.786 ASP 0.348 7 Lens 3 10.104 ASP0.349 Plastic 1.640 23.3 48.31 8 14.808 ASP 0.470 9 Lens 4 −2.483 ASP0.471 Plastic 1.544 55.9 7.25 10 −1.626 ASP 0.056 11 Lens 5 1.971 ASP0.300 Plastic 1.640 23.3 −26.15 12 1.658 ASP 0.518 13 Lens 6 5.605 ASP0.400 Plastic 1.544 55.9 −5.33 14 1.863 ASP 0.300 15 IR-cut filter Plano0.175 Glass 1.517 64.2 — 16 Plano 0.481 17 Image Plano — Note: Referencewavelength (d-line) is 587.6 nm. Half of the effective diameter of thestop at Surface 4 is 0.971 mm.

TABLE 10 Aspheric Coefficients Surface # 2 3 5 6 7 8 k=   1.8148E−01  1.2867E+01 −9.0000E+01 −2.5675E+01 −8.9994E+01 −1.6435E+01  A4=−1.5552E−02 −1.0704E−01 −1.0612E−01 −1.9819E−02 −1.6385E−01 −1.2545E−01 A6=   6.8830E−02   1.0362E−02   1.8141E−01   2.1235E−01   1.3267E−01  1.6650E−01  A8= −2.1397E−01   3.5940E−01   2.3677E−01 −1.6148E−01−9.3131E−01 −6.9014E−01 A10=   2.8715E−01 −6.9572E−01 −7.9521E−01  3.2473E−02   2.5726E+00   1.3326E+00 A12= −1.6495E−01   5.2375E−01  7.7702E−01 −1.4009E−02 −4.0399E+00 −1.4304E+00 A14= −1.5437E−01−2.3796E−01   1.0642E−01   3.2486E+00   8.1326E−01 A16= −9.9216E−01−1.7643E−01 Surface # 9 10 11 12 13 14 k= −2.7374E+00 −1.8467E+00−7.3605E+00 −7.2304E+00 −9.0000E+01 −1.0459E+01  A4=   5.2244E−02−9.0721E−03 −9.7430E−02 −9.0611E−02 −2.9819E−01 −1.8506E−01  A6=−1.9742E−02   4.8002E−02   2.3597E−02   2.2509E−02   1.3112E−01  9.7934E−02  A8= −1.4118E−02 −7.8975E−02 −1.6046E−02 −6.0443E−03−1.5472E−02 −3.8677E−02 A10=   1.2518E−02   9.4245E−02   3.7155E−03−1.0453E−03 −4.5029E−03   1.1406E−02 A12= −2.1790E−03 −5.1702E−02−2.5343E−04   1.2475E−03   1.7984E−03 −2.2323E−03 A14=   1.2639E−02−2.8291E−04 −2.3574E−04   2.4604E−04 A16= −1.1375E−03   2.0154E−05  1.0823E−05 −1.1382E−05

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 5th embodiment, thedefinitions of these parameters shown in the following table are thesame as those stated in the 1st embodiment with corresponding values forthe 5th embodiment. Moreover, these parameters can be calculated fromTable 9 and Table 10 as the following values and satisfy the followingrelationships:

f [mm] 4.11 f4/f6 −1.36 Fno 2.05 f6/f5 0.20 HFOV [deg.] 38.0 f/f6 −0.77(V2 + V3 + V5)/3 23.3 SAG51/CT5 −1.13 T34/T23 1.35 CRA [deg.] 34.24T45/T56 0.11 (TD/Y) + (BL/Y) 1.45 (R9 − R10)/(R9 + R10) 0.09

6th Embodiment

FIG. 11 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly accordingto the 6th embodiment of the present disclosure. FIG. 12 shows sphericalaberration curves, astigmatic field curves and a distortion curve of thephotographing lens assembly according to the 6th embodiment. In FIG. 11,the photographing lens assembly includes, in order from an object sideto an image side, an aperture stop 600, a first lens element 610, a stop601, a second lens element 620, a third lens element 630, a fourth lenselement 640, a fifth lens element 650, a sixth lens element 660, anIR-cut filter 680, an image plane 670 and an image sensor 690. Thephotographing lens assembly has a total of six lens elements withrefractive power.

The first lens element 610 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 611 and a concave image-side surface 612. The firstlens element 610 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 611 and the image-side surface 612 being aspheric.

The second lens element 620 with negative refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 621 and a concave image-side surface 622. The secondlens element 620 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 621 and the image-side surface 622 being aspheric.

The third lens element 630 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 631 and a concave image-side surface 632. The thirdlens element 630 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 631 and the image-side surface 632 being aspheric.

The fourth lens element 640 with positive refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 641 and a convex image-side surface 642. The fourthlens element 640 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 641 and the image-side surface 642 being aspheric.

The fifth lens element 650 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 651 and a concave image-side surface 652, whereinthe object-side surface 651 of the fifth lens element 650 changes fromconvex at a paraxial region thereof to concave at a peripheral regionthereof, and the image-side surface 652 of the fifth lens element 650changes from concave at a paraxial region thereof to convex at aperipheral region thereof. Furthermore, both of the object-side surface651 and the image-side surface 652 of the fifth lens element 650 have atleast one inflection point. The fifth lens element 650 is made ofplastic material and has the object-side surface 651 and the image-sidesurface 652 being aspheric.

The sixth lens element 660 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 661 and a concave image-side surface 662, whereinthe object-side surface 661 of the sixth lens element 660 is convex at aparaxial region thereof and comprises two inflection points between theparaxial region thereof and a peripheral region thereof. Furthermore,both of the object-side surface 661 and the image-side surface 662 ofthe sixth lens element 660 have at least one inflection point. The sixthlens element 660 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 661 and the image-side surface 662 being aspheric.

A projection point P1 of a maximum effective diameter position on theimage-side surface 662 of the sixth lens element 660 onto an opticalaxis is closer to an imaged object than an axial vertex P2 on theobject-side surface 661 of the sixth lens element 660. Please refer toFIG. 21 (exemplary figure), the exemplary figure for the sixthembodiment will not otherwise be provided herein.

The IR-cut filter 680 is made of glass, and located between the sixthlens element 660 and the image plane 670, and will not affect the focallength of the photographing lens assembly.

The detailed optical data of the 6th embodiment are shown in Table 11and the aspheric surface data are shown in Table 12 below.

TABLE 11 6th Embodiment f = 4.09 mm, Fno = 2.05, HFOV = 38.0 deg.Surface Focal # Curvature Radius Thickness Material Index Abbe # Length0 Object Plano Infinity 1 Ape. Stop Plano −0.350 2 Lens 1 1.455 ASP0.577 Plastic 1.544 55.9 3.10 3 9.020 ASP 0.028 4 Stop Plano 0.025 5Lens 2 −19.098 ASP 0.240 Plastic 1.640 23.3 −8.01 6 7.040 ASP 0.399 7Lens 3 23.261 ASP 0.313 Plastic 1.640 23.3 −390.82 8 21.169 ASP 0.406 9Lens 4 −1.704 ASP 0.412 Plastic 1.544 55.9 5.65 10 −1.190 ASP 0.050 11Lens 5 3.012 ASP 0.320 Plastic 1.640 23.3 −21.23 12 2.363 ASP 0.401 13Lens 6 3.534 ASP 0.380 Plastic 1.544 55.9 −5.49 14 1.557 ASP 0.400 15IR-cut filter Plano 0.175 Glass 1.517 64.2 — 16 Plano 0.619 17 ImagePlano — Note: Reference wavelength (d-line) is 587.6 nm. Half of theeffective diameter of the stop at Surface 4 is 0.970 mm.

TABLE 12 Aspheric Coefficients Surface # 2 3 5 6 7 8 k=   2.1067E−01−5.6569E+00 −9.0000E+01 −2.5675E+01 −8.9994E+01 −1.6435E+01  A4=−1.6990E−02 −7.7776E−02 −7.3328E−02   5.2741E−04 −2.3660E−01 −1.4887E−01 A6=   7.8771E−02 −1.2742E−01 −2.3323E−02   8.7884E−02   4.5042E−01  2.1562E−01  A8= −2.4746E−01   6.7762E−01   7.5794E−01   1.7598E−01−2.5429E+00 −8.7785E−01 A10=   3.3585E−01 −1.1106E+00 −1.5114E+00−4.5486E−01   6.8301E+00   1.6806E+00 A12= −1.9392E−01   8.0436E−01  1.2892E+00   3.5743E−01 −1.0414E+01 −1.8291E+00 A14= −2.3147E−01−3.8145E−01   8.2134E−04   8.2898E+00   1.0625E+00 Al 6= −2.6002E+00−2.3565E−01 Surface # 9 10 11 12 13 14 k= −4.1629E+00 −1.6790E+00−7.3615E+00 −2.3154E+01 −9.0000E+01 −1.2489E+01  A4=   3.8475E−03  2.5395E−02 −1.0796E−01 −5.8209E−02 −2.8589E−01 −1.6547E−01  A6=  8.9230E−02 −9.5194E−03   4.0729E−02 −2.1011E−03   1.6516E−01  9.4166E−02  A8= −1.0692E−01   4.9179E−03 −3.2408E−02   9.1179E−03−5.7829E−02 −4.0983E−02 A10=   4.6517E−02   5.5155E−02   8.2337E−03−1.0066E−02   1.5191E−02   1.2568E−02 A12= −6.4329E−03 −5.4968E−02−5.9430E−04   4.5659E−03 −2.7791E−03 −2.4608E−03 A14=   1.9007E−02−8.7087E−04   2.9787E−04   2.6734E−04 A16= −2.2980E−03   5.8567E−05−1.3752E−05 −1.2035E−05

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 6th embodiment, thedefinitions of these parameters shown in the following table are thesame as those stated in the 1st embodiment with corresponding values forthe 6th embodiment. Moreover, these parameters can be calculated fromTable 11 and Table 12 as the following values and satisfy the followingrelationships:

f [mm] 4.09 f4/f6 −1.03 Fno 2.05 f6/f5 0.26 HFOV [deg.] 38.0 f/f6 −0.74(V2 + V3 + V5)/3 23.3 SAG51/CT5 −1.20 T34/T23 1.02 CRA [deg.] 33.61T45/T56 0.12 (TD/Y) + (BL/Y) 1.46 (R9 − R10)/(R9 + R10) 0.12

7th Embodiment

FIG. 13 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly accordingto the 7th embodiment of the present disclosure. FIG. 14 shows sphericalaberration curves, astigmatic field curves and a distortion curve of thephotographing lens assembly according to the 7th embodiment. In FIG. 13,the photographing lens assembly includes, in order from an object sideto an image side, an aperture stop 700, a first lens element 710, asecond lens element 720, a third lens element 730, a fourth lens element740, a fifth lens element 750, a sixth lens element 760, an IR-cutfilter 780, an image plane 770 and an image sensor 790. Thephotographing lens assembly has a total of six lens elements withrefractive power.

The first lens element 710 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 711 and a concave image-side surface 712. The firstlens element 710 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 711 and the image-side surface 712 being aspheric.

The second lens element 720 with negative refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 721 and a concave image-side surface 722. The secondlens element 720 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 721 and the image-side surface 722 being aspheric.

The third lens element 730 with negative refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 731 and a concave image-side surface 732. The thirdlens element 730 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 731 and the image-side surface 732 being aspheric.

The fourth lens element 740 with positive refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 741 and a convex image-side surface 742. The fourthlens element 740 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 741 and the image-side surface 742 being aspheric.

The fifth lens element 750 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 751 and a concave image-side surface 752, whereinthe object-side surface 751 of the fifth lens element 750 changes fromconvex at a paraxial region thereof to concave at a peripheral regionthereof, and the image-side surface 752 of the fifth lens element 750changes from concave at a paraxial region thereof to convex at aperipheral region thereof. Furthermore, both of the object-side surface751 and the image-side surface 752 of the fifth lens element 750 have atleast one inflection point. The fifth lens element 750 is made ofplastic material and has the object-side surface 751 and the image-sidesurface 752 being aspheric.

The sixth lens element 760 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 761 and a concave image-side surface 762, whereinthe object-side surface 761 of the sixth lens element 760 is convex at aparaxial region thereof and comprises two inflection points between theparaxial region thereof and a peripheral region thereof. Furthermore,both of the object-side surface 761 and the image-side surface 762 ofthe sixth lens element 760 have at least one inflection point. The sixthlens element 760 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 761 and the image-side surface 762 being aspheric.

A projection point P1 of a maximum effective diameter position on theimage-side surface 762 of the sixth lens element 760 onto an opticalaxis is closer to an imaged object than an axial vertex P2 on theobject-side surface 761 of the sixth lens element 760. Please refer toFIG. 21 (exemplary figure), the exemplary figure for the seventhembodiment will not otherwise be provided herein.

The IR-cut filter 780 is made of glass, and located between the sixthlens element 760 and the image plane 770, and will not affect the focallength of the photographing lens assembly.

The detailed optical data of the 7th embodiment are shown in Table 13and the aspheric surface data are shown in Table 14 below.

TABLE 13 7th Embodiment f = 4.10 mm, Fno = 2.17, HFOV = 37.7 deg.Surface Focal # Curvature Radius Thickness Material Index Abbe # Length0 Object Plano Infinity 1 Ape. Stop Plano −0.312 2 Lens 1 1.476 ASP0.561 Plastic 1.544 55.9 2.93 3 17.478 ASP 0.050 4 Lens 2 −44.461 ASP0.230 Plastic 1.614 25.6 −7.98 5 5.517 ASP 0.484 6 Lens 3 −29.812 ASP0.323 Plastic 1.608 25.7 −9.94 7 7.608 ASP 0.219 8 Lens 4 −2.764 ASP0.500 Plastic 1.544 55.9 4.99 9 −1.457 ASP 0.080 10 Lens 5 3.431 ASP0.320 Plastic 1.640 23.3 −69.74 11 3.070 ASP 0.674 12 Lens 6 3.076 ASP0.380 Plastic 1.535 55.7 −4.87 13 1.350 ASP 0.400 14 IR-cut filter Plano0.175 Glass 1.517 64.2 — 15 Plano 0.400 16 Image Plano — Note: Referencewavelength (d-line) is 587.6 nm.

TABLE 14 Aspheric Coefficients Surface # 2 3 4 5 6 7 k=   1.4786E−01−7.0000E+01 −4.5128E+01 −3.9136E+00   2.0000E+01 −1.0000E+00  A4=−1.3679E−02 −6.6839E−02 −6.2028E−02   3.5691E−03 −2.9785E−01 −1.9066E−01 A6=   7.1321E−02 −1.1315E−01 −2.6503E−02   7.7382E−02   4.8995E−01  2.3711E−01  A8= −2.3298E−01   6.4821E−01   7.5810E−01   1.8037E−01−2.5480E+00 −8.6882E−01 A10=   3.1683E−01 −1.1093E+00 −1.5104E+00−4.3880E−01   6.8306E+00   1.6679E+00 A12= −1.9389E−01   8.0440E−01  1.2893E+00   3.5743E−01 −1.0414E+01 −1.8386E+00 A14= −2.3146E−01−3.8140E−01   7.8605E−04   8.2898E+00   1.0625E+00 A16= −2.6002E+00−2.3565E−01 Surface # 8 9 10 11 12 13 k= −1.4130E+01 −1.1894E+00−8.8256E+00 −3.5301E+01 −5.9648E+01 −9.5775E+00  A4= −7.1184E−03  1.9567E−02 −1.0963E−01 −6.1061E−02 −3.0290E−01 −1.7194E−01  A6=  7.1999E−02 −5.7436E−03   4.1872E−02 −3.7524E−03   1.6600E−01  9.3646E−02  A8= −1.0762E−01   5.0723E−03 −3.2353E−02   9.4533E−03−5.7537E−02 −4.0783E−02 A10=   4.9373E−02   5.5165E−02   7.8294E−03−1.0027E−02   1.5206E−02   1.2580E−02 A12= −5.9465E−03 −5.5016E−02−5.4094E−04   4.5615E−03 −2.7784E−03 −2.4611E−03 A14=   1.8930E−02−8.7330E−04   2.9732E−04   2.6681E−04 A16= −2.2670E−03   5.8399E−05−1.3907E−05 −1.2028E−05

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 7th embodiment, thedefinitions of these parameters shown in the following table are thesame as those stated in the 1st embodiment with corresponding values forthe 7th embodiment. Moreover, these parameters can be calculated fromTable 13 and Table 14 as the following values and satisfy the followingrelationships:

f [mm] 4.10 f4/f6 −1.03 Fno 2.17 f6/f5 0.07 HFOV [deg.] 37.7 f/f6 −0.84(V2 + V3 + V5)/3 24.9 SAG51/CT5 −1.24 T34/T23 0.45 CRA [deg.] 30.43T45/T56 0.12 (TD/Y) + (BL/Y) 1.47 (R9 − R10)/(R9 + R10) 0.06

8th Embodiment

FIG. 15 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly accordingto the 8th embodiment of the present disclosure. FIG. 16 shows sphericalaberration curves, astigmatic field curves and a distortion curve of thephotographing lens assembly according to the 8th embodiment. In FIG. 15,the photographing lens assembly includes, in order from an object sideto an image side, an aperture stop 800, a first lens element 810, asecond lens element 820, a third lens element 830, a fourth lens element840, a fifth lens element 850, a sixth lens element 860, an IR-cutfilter 880, an image plane 870 and an image sensor 890. Thephotographing lens assembly has a total of six lens elements withrefractive power.

The first lens element 810 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 811 and a convex image-side surface 812. The firstlens element 810 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 811 and the image-side surface 812 being aspheric.

The second lens element 820 with negative refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 821 and a concave image-side surface 822. The secondlens element 820 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 821 and the image-side surface 822 being aspheric.

The third lens element 830 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 831 and a concave image-side surface 832. The thirdlens element 830 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 831 and the image-side surface 832 being aspheric.

The fourth lens element 840 with positive refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 841 and a convex image-side surface 842. The fourthlens element 840 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 841 and the image-side surface 842 being aspheric.

The fifth lens element 850 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 851 and a concave image-side surface 852, whereinthe object-side surface 851 of the fifth lens element 850 changes fromconvex at a paraxial region thereof to concave at a peripheral regionthereof, and the image-side surface 852 of the fifth lens element 850changes from concave at a paraxial region thereof to convex at aperipheral region thereof. Furthermore, both of the object-side surface851 and the image-side surface 852 of the fifth lens element 850 have atleast one inflection point. The fifth lens element 850 is made ofplastic material and has the object-side surface 851 and the image-sidesurface 852 being aspheric.

The sixth lens element 860 with negative refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 861 and a concave image-side surface 862.Furthermore, both of the object-side surface 861 and the image-sidesurface 862 of the sixth lens element 860 have at least one inflectionpoint. The sixth lens element 860 is made of plastic material and hasthe object-side surface 861 and the image-side surface 862 beingaspheric.

A projection point P1 of a maximum effective diameter position on theimage-side surface 862 of the sixth lens element 860 onto an opticalaxis is closer to an imaged object than an axial vertex P2 on theobject-side surface 861 of the sixth lens element 860. Please refer toFIG. 21 (exemplary figure), the exemplary figure for the eighthembodiment will not otherwise be provided herein.

The IR-cut filter 880 is made of glass, and located between the sixthlens element 860 and the image plane 870, and will not affect the focallength of the photographing lens assembly.

The detailed optical data of the 8th embodiment are shown in Table 15and the aspheric surface data are shown in Table 16 below.

TABLE 15 8th Embodiment f = 4.11 mm, Fno = 2.17, HFOV = 37.7 deg.Surface Focal # Curvature Radius Thickness Material Index Abbe # Length0 Object Plano Infinity 1 Ape. Stop Plano −0.320 2 Lens 1 1.479 ASP0.568 Plastic 1.544 55.9 2.70 3 −155.451 ASP 0.050 4 Lens 2 −5.732 ASP0.230 Plastic 1.583 30.2 −5.48 5 7.331 ASP 0.415 6 Lens 3 7.832 ASP0.310 Plastic 1.608 25.7 −19.78 7 4.672 ASP 0.262 8 Lens 4 −3.306 ASP0.506 Plastic 1.544 55.9 5.71 9 −1.687 ASP 0.254 10 Lens 5 3.544 ASP0.336 Plastic 1.640 23.3 −61.70 11 3.132 ASP 0.711 12 Lens 6 −76.923 ASP0.380 Plastic 1.535 55.7 −4.51 13 2.494 ASP 0.300 14 IR-cut filter Plano0.175 Glass 1.517 64.2 — 15 Plano 0.306 16 Image Plano — Note: Referencewavelength (d-line) is 587.6 nm.

TABLE 16 Aspheric Coefficients Surface # 2 3 4 5 6 7 k=   1.5957E−01−7.0000E+01 −4.3029E+01   1.8994E+01 −5.0000E+01 −6.0758E+00  A4=−1.2492E−02 −5.3893E−02 −4.7189E−02   1.8209E−02 −3.0714E−01 −1.8751E−01 A6=   7.5892E−02 −1.1668E−01 −1.3121E−02   6.3942E−02   5.1234E−01  2.3529E−01  A8= −2.3788E−01   6.8155E−01   7.3780E−01   1.8843E−01−2.5718E+00 −8.6512E−01 A10=   3.2550E−01 −1.1202E+00 −1.4996E+00−4.6378E−01   6.8270E+00   1.6704E+00 A12= −1.9389E−01   8.0440E−01  1.2893E+00   3.5743E−01 −1.0414E+01 −1.8399E+00 A14= −2.3146E−01−3.8140E−01   7.8604E−04   8.2898E+00   1.0625E+00 A16= −2.6002E+00−2.3565E−01 Surface # 8 9 10 11 12 13 k= −2.2371E+01 −1.4883E+00−7.2875E+00 −3.0481E+01   1.0000E+00 −1.2807E+01  A4=   1.6088E−02  2.5735E−02 −1.1653E−01 −6.5131E−02 −3.0570E−01 −1.7512E−01  A6=  8.2061E−02 −6.4806E−03   4.1369E−02 −4.4224E−03   1.6628E−01  9.4642E−02  A8= −1.0619E−01   4.7927E−03 −3.2604E−02   9.0529E−03−5.7380E−02 −4.0636E−02 A10=   4.7866E−02   5.5093E−02   7.3755E−03−1.0087E−02   1.5218E−02   1.2564E−02 A12= −7.3709E−03 −5.4965E−02−3.8128E−04   4.5557E−03 −2.7788E−03 −2.4670E−03 A14=   1.8923E−02−8.7141E−04   2.9685E−04   2.6627E−04 A16= −2.2967E−03   6.2085E−05−1.4076E−05 −1.1880E−05

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 8th embodiment, thedefinitions of these parameters shown in the following table are thesame as those stated in the 1st embodiment with corresponding values forthe 8th embodiment. Moreover, these parameters can be calculated fromTable 15 and Table 16 as the following values and satisfy the followingrelationships:

f [mm] 4.11 f4/f6 −1.27 Fno 2.17 f6/f5 0.07 HFOV [deg.] 37.7 f/f6 −0.91(V2 + V3 + V5)/3 26.4 SAG51/CT5 −1.45 T34/T23 0.63 CRA [deg.] 32.20T45/T56 0.36 (TD/Y) + (BL/Y) 1.47 (R9 − R10)/(R9 + R10) 0.06

9th Embodiment

FIG. 17 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly accordingto the 9th embodiment of the present disclosure. FIG. 18 shows sphericalaberration curves, astigmatic field curves and a distortion curve of thephotographing lens assembly according to the 9th embodiment. In FIG. 17,the photographing lens assembly includes, in order from an object sideto an image side, an aperture stop 900, a first lens element 910, asecond lens element 920, a third lens element 930, a fourth lens element940, a fifth lens element 950, a sixth lens element 960, an IR-cutfilter 980, an image plane 970 and an image sensor 990. Thephotographing lens assembly has a total of six lens elements withrefractive power.

The first lens element 910 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 911 and a concave image-side surface 912. The firstlens element 910 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 911 and the image-side surface 912 being aspheric.

The second lens element 920 with negative refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 921 and a concave image-side surface 922. The secondlens element 920 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 921 and the image-side surface 922 being aspheric.

The third lens element 930 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 931 and a concave image-side surface 932. The thirdlens element 930 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 931 and the image-side surface 932 being aspheric.

The fourth lens element 940 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 941 and a convex image-side surface 942. The fourthlens element 940 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 941 and the image-side surface 942 being aspheric.

The fifth lens element 950 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 951 and a concave image-side surface 952, whereinthe object-side surface 951 of the fifth lens element 950 changes fromconvex at a paraxial region thereof to concave at a peripheral regionthereof, and the image-side surface 952 of the fifth lens element 950changes from concave at a paraxial region thereof to convex at aperipheral region thereof. Furthermore, both of the object-side surface951 and the image-side surface 952 of the fifth lens element 950 have atleast one inflection point. The fifth lens element 950 is made ofplastic material and has the object-side surface 951 and the image-sidesurface 952 being aspheric.

The sixth lens element 960 with negative refractive power has a concaveobject-side surface 961 and a concave image-side surface 962.Furthermore, both of the object-side surface 961 and the image-sidesurface 962 of the sixth lens element 960 have at least one inflectionpoint. The sixth lens element 960 is made of plastic material and hasthe object-side surface 961 and the image-side surface 962 beingaspheric.

A projection point P1 of a maximum effective diameter position on theimage-side surface 962 of the sixth lens element 960 onto an opticalaxis is closer to an imaged object than an axial vertex P2 on theobject-side surface 961 of the sixth lens element 960. Please refer toFIG. 21 (exemplary figure), the exemplary figure for the ninthembodiment will not otherwise be provided herein.

The IR-cut filter 980 is made of glass, and located between the sixthlens element 960 and the image plane 970, and will not affect the focallength of the photographing lens assembly.

The detailed optical data of the 9th embodiment are shown in Table 17and the aspheric surface data are shown in Table 18 below.

TABLE 17 9th Embodiment f = 3.91 mm, Fno = 2.20, HFOV = 39.0 deg.Surface Focal # Curvature Radius Thickness Material Index Abbe # Length0 Object Plano Infinity 1 Ape. Stop Plano −0.277 2 Lens 1 1.493 ASP0.479 Plastic 1.544 55.9 3.07 3 12.347 ASP 0.090 4 Lens 2 −6.695 ASP0.235 Plastic 1.607 26.6 −6.71 5 10.538 ASP 0.357 6 Lens 3 3.917 ASP0.311 Plastic 1.583 30.2 −14.26 7 2.585 ASP 0.210 8 Lens 4 83.333 ASP0.742 Plastic 1.544 55.9 3.62 9 −2.009 ASP 0.358 10 Lens 5 6.442 ASP0.354 Plastic 1.633 23.4 −14.20 11 3.672 ASP 0.544 12 Lens 6 −8.818 ASP0.400 Plastic 1.535 55.7 −4.12 13 2.983 ASP 0.300 14 IR-cut filter Plano0.175 Glass 1.517 64.2 — 15 Plano 0.247 16 Image Plano — Note: Referencewavelength (d-line) is 587.6 nm.

TABLE 18 Aspheric Coefficients Surface # 2 3 4 5 6 7 k=   1.4770E−01  1.3433E+01 −5.9739E+01   3.3474E+01 −3.3645E+01 −9.7398E+00  A4=−1.5325E−02 −4.3799E−02 −3.0456E−02   1.7778E−02 −2.9562E−01 −1.8707E−01 A6=   7.8694E−02 −1.4478E−01 −7.7719E−03   8.8082E−02   5.3532E−01  2.4762E−01  A8= −2.4302E−01   6.8445E−01   7.1369E−01   2.0501E−01−2.5669E+00 −8.6361E−01 A10=   3.2890E−01 −1.1024E+00 −1.4779E+00−4.8811E−01   6.8118E+00   1.6646E+00 A12= −1.9405E−01   8.0414E−01  1.2890E+00   3.5676E−01 −1.0414E+01 −1.8457E+00 A14= −2.3146E−01−3.8140E−01   7.8220E−04   8.2898E+00   1.0625E+00 A16= −2.6002E+00−2.3561E−01 Surface # 8 9 10 11 12 13 k= −6.0000E+01 −1.0610E+00−4.7989E+00 −5.0293E+01 −3.8905E+00 −8.5047E+00  A4=   1.7382E−02  2.1469E−02 −1.1068E−01 −5.6704E−02 −3.0716E−01 −1.7772E−01  A6=  8.1688E−02 −3.8834E−03   4.4630E−02 −4.0056E−03   1.6785E−01  9.5047E−02  A8= −1.0614E−01   5.1132E−03 −3.2435E−02   8.9877E−03−5.7073E−02 −4.0463E−02 A10=   4.7890E−02   5.5093E−02   7.2830E−03−1.0115E−02   1.5238E−02   1.2562E−02 A12= −7.4604E−03 −5.4962E−02−3.0909E−04   4.5519E−03 −2.7835E−03 −2.4710E−03 A14=   1.8930E−02−8.7064E−04   2.9442E−04   2.6598E−04 A16= −2.2901E−03   6.3280E−05−1.4911E−05 −1.1842E−05

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 9th embodiment, thedefinitions of these parameters shown in the following table are thesame as those stated in the 1st embodiment with corresponding values forthe 9th embodiment. Moreover, these parameters can be calculated fromTable 17 and Table 18 as the following values and satisfy the followingrelationships:

f [mm] 3.91 f4/f6 −0.88 Fno 2.20 f6/f5 0.29 HFOV [deg.] 39.0 f/f6 −0.95(V2 + V3 + V5)/3 26.7 SAG51/CT5 −1.60 T34/T23 0.59 CRA [deg.] 35.25T45/T56 0.66 (TD/Y) + (BL/Y) 1.47 (R9 − R10)/(R9 + R10) 0.27

10th Embodiment

FIG. 19 is a schematic view of a photographing lens assembly accordingto the 10th embodiment of the present disclosure. FIG. 20 showsspherical aberration curves, astigmatic field curves and a distortioncurve of the photographing lens assembly according to the 10thembodiment. In FIG. 19, the photographing lens assembly includes, inorder from an object side to an image side, an aperture stop 1000, afirst lens element 1010, a second lens element 1020, a third lenselement 1030, a fourth lens element 1040, a fifth lens element 1050, asixth lens element 1060, an IR-cut filter 1080, an image plane 1070 andan image sensor 1090. The photographing lens assembly has a total of sixlens elements with refractive power.

The first lens element 1010 with positive refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 1011 and a convex image-side surface 1012. The firstlens element 1010 is made of plastic material and has the object-sidesurface 1011 and the image-side surface 1012 being aspheric.

The second lens element 1020 with negative refractive power has aconcave object-side surface 1021 and a concave image-side surface 1022.The second lens element 1020 is made of plastic material and has theobject-side surface 1021 and the image-side surface 1022 being aspheric.

The third lens element 1030 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 1031 and a concave image-side surface 1032. Thethird lens element 1030 is made of plastic material and has theobject-side surface 1031 and the image-side surface 1032 being aspheric.

The fourth lens element 1040 with positive refractive power has aconcave object-side surface 1041 and a convex image-side surface 1042.The fourth lens element 1040 is made of plastic material and has theobject-side surface 1041 and the image-side surface 1042 being aspheric.

The fifth lens element 1050 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 1051 and a concave image-side surface 1052, whereinthe object-side surface 1051 of the fifth lens element 1050 changes fromconvex at a paraxial region thereof to concave at a peripheral regionthereof, and the image-side surface 1052 of the fifth lens element 1050changes from concave at a paraxial region thereof to convex at aperipheral region thereof. Furthermore, both of the object-side surface1051 and the image-side surface 1052 of the fifth lens element 1050 haveat least one inflection point. The fifth lens element 1050 is made ofplastic material and has the object-side surface 1051 and the image-sidesurface 1052 being aspheric.

The sixth lens element 1060 with negative refractive power has a convexobject-side surface 1061 and a concave image-side surface 1062, whereinthe object-side surface 1061 of the sixth lens element 1060 is convex ata paraxial region thereof and comprises two inflection points betweenthe paraxial region thereof and a peripheral region thereof.Furthermore, both of the object-side surface 1061 and the image-sidesurface 1062 of the sixth lens element 1060 have at least one inflectionpoint. The sixth lens element 1060 is made of plastic material and hasthe object-side surface 1061 and the image-side surface 1062 beingaspheric.

A projection point P1 of a maximum effective diameter position on theimage-side surface 1062 of the sixth lens element 1060 onto an opticalaxis is closer to an imaged object than an axial vertex P2 on theobject-side surface 1061 of the sixth lens element 1060. Please refer toFIG. 21 (exemplary figure), the exemplary figure for the tenthembodiment will not otherwise be provided herein.

The IR-cut filter 1080 is made of glass, and located between the sixthlens element 1060 and the image plane 1070, and will not affect thefocal length of the photographing lens assembly.

The detailed optical data of the 10th embodiment are shown in Table 19and the aspheric surface data are shown in Table 20 below.

TABLE 19 10th Embodiment f = 3.94 mm, Fno = 2.20, HFOV = 39.3 deg.Surface Focal # Curvature Radius Thickness Material Index Abbe # Length0 Object Plano Infinity 1 Ape. Stop Plano −0.250 2 Lens 1 1.566 ASP0.603 Plastic 1.544 55.9 2.72 3 −23.142 ASP 0.050 4 Lens 2 −4.628 ASP0.240 Plastic 1.640 23.3 −6.29 5 31.447 ASP 0.348 6 Lens 3 66.021 ASP0.377 Plastic 1.640 23.3 −126.21 7 36.242 ASP 0.290 8 Lens 4 −1.853 ASP0.513 Plastic 1.544 55.9 5.42 9 −1.249 ASP 0.089 10 Lens 5 2.749 ASP0.320 Plastic 1.640 23.3 −13.44 11 1.988 ASP 0.361 12 Lens 6 2.268 ASP0.380 Plastic 1.535 55.7 −6.02 13 1.253 ASP 0.400 14 IR-cut filter Plano0.175 Glass 1.517 64.2 — 15 Plano 0.608 16 Image Plano — Note: Referencewavelength (d-line) is 587.6 nm.

TABLE 20 Aspheric Coefficients Surface # 2 3 4 5 6 7 k=   1.5259E−01−7.0000E+01 −3.9805E+01 −8.7683E+00 −5.0000E+01 −4.3576E+01  A4=−1.9383E−02 −6.4641E−02 −6.3114E−02 −1.0895E−02 −2.6624E−01 −1.4510E−01 A6=   7.1882E−02 −1.2497E−01 −8.3987E−03   6.2270E−02   4.7227E−01  2.2437E−01  A8= −2.6180E−01   6.7565E−01   7.4955E−01   1.9392E−01−2.5723E+00 −8.7050E−01 A10=   3.3773E−01 −1.1061E+00 −1.5074E+00−5.1980E−01   6.8765E+00   1.6778E+00 A12= −1.9383E−01   8.0537E−01  1.2895E+00   3.4634E−01 −1.0396E+01 −1.8258E+00 A14= −2.3117E−01−3.8168E−01   1.6287E−02   8.2775E+00   1.0632E+00 A16= −2.6001E+00−2.3834E−01 Surface # 8 9 10 11 12 13 k= −6.0522E+00 −1.4965E+00−9.7604E+00 −1.5705E+01 −4.0875E+01 −9.6655E+00  A4=   5.7620E−03  2.9591E−02 −1.1843E−01 −7.2056E−02 −2.8788E−01 −1.6534E−01  A6=  8.5144E−02 −5.3307E−03   3.7823E−02 −5.0018E−04   1.6525E−01  9.4567E−02  A8= −1.0764E−01   5.1240E−03 −3.1114E−02   9.6109E−03−5.7811E−02 −4.0919E−02 A10=   4.6849E−02   5.5027E−02   8.2675E−03−1.0052E−02   1.5191E−02   1.2563E−02 A12= −5.7296E−03 −5.5038E−02−5.9937E−04   4.5596E−03 −2.7787E−03 −2.4633E−03 A14=   1.8994E−02−8.7238E−04   2.9782E−04   2.6702E−04 A16= −2.3318E−03   5.8570E−05−1.3839E−05 −1.2022E−05

In the photographing lens assembly according to the 10th embodiment, thedefinitions of these parameters shown in the following table are thesame as those stated in the 1st embodiment with corresponding values forthe 10th embodiment. Moreover, these parameters can be calculated fromTable 19 and Table 20 as the following values and satisfy the followingrelationships:

f [mm] 3.94 f4/f6 −0.90 Fno 2.20 f6/f5 0.45 HFOV [deg.] 39.3 f/f6 −0.65(V2 + V3 + V5)/3 23.3 SAG51/CT5 −1.36 T34/T23 0.83 CRA [deg.] 32.13T45/T56 0.25 (TD/Y) + (BL/Y) 1.46 (R9 − R10)/(R9 + R10) 0.16

It is to be noted that TABLES 1-20 show different data of the differentembodiments; however, the data of the different embodiments are obtainedfrom experiments. Therefore, any imaging lens system of the samestructure is considered to be less than or equal to the scope of thepresent disclosure even if it uses different data. The embodimentsdepicted above and the appended drawings are exemplary and are notintended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.

What is claimed is:
 1. A photographing lens assembly comprising, inorder from an object side to an image side: a first lens element havingpositive refractive power; second lens element having negativerefractive power; a third lens element having a concave image-sidesurface; a fourth lens element having positive refractive power; a fifthlens element with negative refractive power having a concave image-sidesurface, wherein an object-side surface and the image-side surface ofthe fifth lens element are aspheric, and the fifth lens element has atleast one inflection point on at least one of the object-side surfaceand the image-side surface thereof; and a sixth lens element having aconvex object-side surface, wherein the object-side surface and animage-side surface of the sixth lens element are aspheric, and the sixthlens element has at least one inflection point on at least one of theobject-side surface and the image-side surface thereof; wherein thephotographing lens assembly has a total of six lens elements, each ofthe first lens element, the second lens element, the third lens element,the fourth lens element, the fifth lens element and the sixth lenselement is a single and non-cemented lens element, an axial distancebetween the first lens element and the second lens element is smallerthan an axial distance between the second lens element and the thirdlens element.
 2. The photographing lens assembly of claim 1, wherein theimage-side surface of the sixth lens element is concave, an f-number ofthe photographing lens assembly is Fno, and the following relationshipis satisfied:1.2<Fno<2.3.
 3. The photographing lens assembly of claim 1, wherein thethird lens element has negative refractive power.
 4. The photographinglens assembly of claim 1, wherein the first lens element has a concaveimage-side surface.
 5. The photographing lens assembly of claim 1,wherein the sixth lens element has negative refractive power.
 6. Thephotographing lens assembly of claim 1, wherein the fourth lens elementhas a concave object-side surface and a convex image-side surface. 7.The photographing lens assembly of claim 1, wherein an Abbe number ofthe second lens element is V2, an Abbe number of the third lens elementis V3, an Abbe number of the fifth lens element is V5, and the followingrelationship is satisfied:15<(V2+V3+V5)/3<30.
 8. The photographing lens assembly of claim 1,wherein an axial distance between an object-side surface of the firstlens element and the image-side surface of the sixth lens element is TD,a maximum image height of the photographing lens assembly is Y, an axialdistance between the image-side surface of the sixth lens element and animage plane is BL, and the following relationship is satisfied:(TD/Y)+(BL/Y)<1.65.
 9. The photographing lens assembly of claim 1,wherein the object-side surface of the sixth lens element has a firstconvex shape at a paraxial region, a second convex shape at a peripheralregion, and a concave shape between the first convex shape and thesecond convex shape.
 10. The photographing lens assembly of claim 1,further comprising: a stop located on the object side from the firstlens element.
 11. A photographing lens assembly comprising, in orderfrom an object side to an image side: a first lens element with positiverefractive power having a convex object-side surface and a concaveimage-side surface; a second lens element; a third lens element; afourth lens element having a concave object-side surface; a fifth lenselement with negative refractive power having a concave image-sidesurface, wherein an object-side surface and the image-side surface ofthe fifth lens element are aspheric, and the fifth lens element has atleast one inflection point on at least one of the object-side surfaceand the image-side surface thereof; and a sixth lens element withnegative refractive power having a concave image-side surface, whereinan object-side surface and the image-side surface of the sixth lenselement are aspheric, and the sixth lens element has at least oneinflection point on at least one of the object-side surface and theimage-side surface thereof; wherein the photographing lens assembly hasa total of six lens elements, each of the first lens element, the secondlens element, the third lens element, the fourth lens element, the fifthlens element and the sixth lens element is a single and non-cementedlens element, an axial distance between the first lens element and thesecond lens element is smaller than an axial distance between the secondlens element and the third lens element.
 12. The photographing lensassembly of claim 11, wherein the second lens element has a concaveimage-side surface, and the object-side surface of the fifth lenselement is convex.
 13. The photographing lens assembly of claim 11,wherein the object-side surface of the sixth lens element is convex. 14.The photographing lens assembly of claim 11, wherein an f-number of thephotographing lens assembly is Fno, and the follow ng relationship issatisfied:1.2<Fno<2.3.
 15. The photographing lens assembly of claim 11, wherein afocal length of the fifth lens element is f5, a focal length of thesixth lens element is f6, an axial distance between the object-sidesurface of the first lens element and the image-side surface of thesixth lens element is TD, a maximum image height of the photographinglens assembly is Y, an axial distance between the image-side surface ofthe sixth lens element and an image plane is BL, and the followingrelationships are satisfied:0<f6/f5<t2; and(TD/Y)+(BL/Y)<1.65.
 16. The photographing lens assembly of claim 11,wherein a curvature radius of the object-side surface of the fifth lenselement is R9, a curvature radius of the image-side surface of the fifthlens element is R10, and the following relationship is satisfied:0<(R9−R10)/(R9+R10)<0.4.
 17. The photographing lens assembly of claim11, wherein a focal length of the photographing lens assembly is f, afocal length of the sixth lens element is f6, and the followingrelationship is satisfied:−1.5<f/f6<−0.64
 18. The photographing lens assembly of claim 11, whereinan axial distance between the second lens element and the third lenselement is T23, an axial distance between the third lens element and thefourth lens element is T34, and the following relationship is satisfied:0.5<T34/T23<1.7.
 19. A photographing lens assembly comprising, in orderfrom an object side to an image side: a first lens element havingpositive refractive power; a second lens element; a third lens elementhaving negative refractive power; a fourth lens element; a fifth lenselement with negative refractive power having a concave image-sidesurface, wherein an object-side surface and the image-side surface ofthe fifth lens element are aspheric, and the fifth lens element has atleast one inflection point on at least one of the object-side surfaceand the image-side surface thereof; and a sixth lens element having aconcave image-side surface, wherein an object-side surface and theimage-side surface of the sixth lens element are aspheric, and the sixthlens element has at least one inflection point on at least one of theobject-side surface and the image-side surface thereof; wherein thephotographing lens assembly has a total of six lens elements, amagnitude of a curvature radius of the mage-side surface of the sixthlens element is smaller than a magnitude of a curvature radius of theobject-side surface of the sixth lens element, and the magnitude of thecurvature radius of the object-side surface of the sixth lens element issmaller than a magnitude of a curvature radius of an image-side surfaceof the first lens element.
 20. The photographing lens assembly of claim19, wherein the first lens element has a convex object-side surface, andthe image-side surface of the first lens element is concave.
 21. Thephotographing lens assembly of claim 19, wherein the third lens elementhas a concave image-side surface.
 22. The photographing lens assembly ofclaim 19, wherein a focal length of the fourth lens element is f4, afocal length of the sixth lens element is f6, and the followingrelationship is satisfied:−3.0<f4/f6<−0.68.
 23. The photographing lens assembly of claim 19,wherein an axial distance between the fourth lens element and the fifthlens element is T45, an axial distance between the fifth lens elementand the sixth lens element is T56, and the following relationship issatisfied:0<T45/T56<0.27.
 24. The photographing lens assembly of claim 19, hereinan incident angle of a chief ray at a maximum image height on an imageplane is CRA, and the following relationship is satisfied:30 degrees<CRA<50 degrees.
 25. The photographing lens assembly of claim19, wherein the object-side surface of the fifth lens element changesfrom convex at a paraxial region thereof to concave at a peripheralregion thereof, and the image-side surface of the fifth lens elementchanges from concave at a paraxial region thereof to convex at aperipheral region thereof.
 26. The photographing lens assembly of claim19, wherein a distance in parallel with an optical axis from an axialvertex on the object-side surface of the fifth lens element to a maximumeffective diameter position on the object-side surface of the fifth lenselement is SAG51, a central thickness of the fifth lens element is CT5,and the following relationship is satisfied:−3<SAG51/CT5<−0.5.
 27. The photographing lens assembly of claim 19,wherein an axial distance between the object-side surface of the firstlens element and the image-side surface of the sixth lens element is TD,a maximum image height of the photographing lens assembly is Y, an axialdistance between the image-side surface of the sixth lens element and animage plane is BL, and the following relationship is satisfied:(TD/Y)+(BL/Y)<1.65.
 28. The photographing lens assembly of claim 19,wherein a magnitude of a focal length of the sixth lens element issmaller than a magnitude of a focal length of the third lens element.